Department clears Michigan cops who cuffed girl at gunpoint

Department clears Michigan cops who cuffed girl at gunpoint


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GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (AP) — A western Michigan police department said it won't discipline officers for detaining an 11-year-old girl, her mother and an aunt at gunpoint outside of their home while searching for another aunt suspected in a stabbing.

The Grand Rapids Police Department said in a news release Wednesday that an internal investigation of the Dec. 6 incident found the officers didn't violate department policy.

Bodycam footage shows police handcuffing Honestie Hodges, who is black, as an officer repeatedly tells the crying girl she's not being arrested.

Police said Carrie Manning, the aunt suspected of stabbing another relative, didn't end up being at the home. Manning, 40, was later found at another home and arrested on charges of assault with intent to murder and resisting and obstructing arrest.

Police said the officers detained the women and girl, who weren't armed, because they hadn't determined if they were suspects.

Police Chief David Rahinsky said the footage left him feeling "nauseated," but the officers followed procedure.

"What that doesn't mean is that we don't recognize that there is a need for us to look at what occurred and identify opportunities here to ensure different outcomes in the future," he said.

He said officers will receive new training and better supervision as part of a multi-step plan that will include an "Honestie policy" for how officers should interact with children.

"Concrete steps are being taken to ensure equitable outcomes in our interactions with the community," Rahinsky said.

Some area pastors were upset that the officers were cleared, saying such investigations should be handled externally.

"We are dismayed that there would even be the possibility of no disciplinary action on behalf of an officer, especially since the process of investigation and discipline is totally controlled by the Grand Rapids Police Department," said the Rev. Jerry Bishop, of LifeQuest Ministries.

Cle Jackson, an NAACP official, said Tuesday that the group wants to sit down with unions representing Grand Rapids officers to demand that police "know better" and "do better."

Copyright © The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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